Product Information 4.5G/Gps Lte-A Europe/Americas Module

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Product Information 4.5G/Gps Lte-A Europe/Americas Module PRODUCT INFORMATION 4.5G/GPS LTE-A EUROPE/AMERICAS MODULE Air Interface • LTE / HSPA+ With the 4.5G/GPS LTE-A Europe/Americas Hotplug Module, LTE-Advan- Transfer Rate ced can be used with every modular Viprinet Multichannel VPN Router. LTE-Advanced is an enhancement of mobile phone standard LTE (4G), • LTE Cat6 (DL up to 300 Mbps / UL up to 50 Mbps) and enables significantly higher data transfer rates. The 4.5G/GPS LTE- • HSPA+ (DL up to 42 Mbps / UL up to 5.76 Mbps) A Europe/Americas Hotplug Module achieves data rates of up to 300 • UMTS (up to 384 Kbps) Mbps–a download three times faster than with previous 4G modules. Frequency Bands By additional support for mobile phone standard UMTS / 3G, this module • LTE-FDD Band provides uninterrupted mobile data connections, and is thus especially 1/2/3/4/5/7/12/13/20/25/26/29/30 suited for Mobile Computing and networking with large data volumes. (2100/1900/1800/1700/850/2600/700abc/ Transition between different mobile phone standards is carried out 700c/800/1900/850/700de/2300 MHz) seemlessly, and at all times, the best available connection is used. Since • LTE-TDD Band 41 (2500 MHz) the module supports satellite systems GPS, Glonass, Beidou, and Galileo, • HSPA+/UMTS Band 1/2/3/4/5/8 the router may be located at all times which is very useful e.g. for effici- (2100/1900/1800/1700/850/900 MHz) ent vehicle fleet management. • GPS: L1 Band with 1.57 GHz Included in the delivery are two high-quality knuckle-mount antennas for Approvals mobile radio and a GPS antenna as well as a small pedestal. Due to two SMA jacks on each module, connecting an external MIMO antenna • Regulatory: FCC, IC, CE, NCC, GCF, PTCRB to the module is possible. Thus, good mobile phone connections can be • Carrier: AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, Vodafone realized even under the most difficult reception conditions. Satellite Systems Please note: LTE uses different radio frequency bands depending on the • GPS, Glonass, Beidou, Galileo country. This module only supports LTE frequency bands common in Euro- pe and North America. When choosing an external antenna, please make sure that it supports the LTE as well as the UMTS frequency bands used. Connectors • 2x SMA connectors (female) to connect Please note: This module works with RuggedVPN firmware only. an external MIMO antenna • 1x SMA connector (female) to connect an external GPS antenna ACCESSORIES Suitable for Antenna Solutions • LTE/UMTS MIMO Dual Omni Panel Antenna • Multichannel VPN Router 200 • LTE/UMTS Car Antenna • Multichannel VPN Router 3X0 • LTE/UMTS Car Bumper Mount Antenna • Multichannel VPN Router 1610 • Multichannel VPN Router 26X0 Updated January 2017. More information: www.viprinet.com, [email protected].
Recommended publications
  • 3GPP Radio Prototyping Using Radio420x
    3GPP Radio Prototyping Using Radio420X Technical Article 3GPP Radio Prototyping Using Radio420X nutaq.com 1 3GPP Radio Prototyping Using Radio420X 3GPP.Radio.Prototyping.Using.Radio420X Written by M. Ahmed Ouameur, PhD, MBA Abstract This application note addresses 3GPP radio design and prototyping when using the Nutaq Radio420X FPGA mezzanine card (FMC). It discusses the most critical radio requirements as they relate to 3GPP radio conformance testing, namely TS 51.021 (GSM) and TS 36.141 (LET). Being similar to some extent to LTE, we invite the reader to apply the same methods and analysis to WCDMA. The main focus is on the GSM DCS1800 pico base station (BTS) and the LTE local area and home eNB. The scope is limited to FDD in UMTS bands 1, 2, 3 and 4, with a 5 MHz bandwidth for LTE enhanced node B (eNB). Table.of.Content 1 INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................................................................................................. 3 2 RADIO420X.CAPABILITIES.AND.RF.PERFORMANCE.......................................................................................................... 4 3 TRANSMITTER.RF.REQUIREMENTS.......................................................................................................................................... 9 3.1 MODULATION ACCURACY: FREQUENCY ERROR, PHASE ERROR AND ERROR VECTOR MAGNITUDE .......9 3.2 ADJACENT CHANNEL POWER ..............................................................................................................................................................12
    [Show full text]
  • UMTS: Alive and Well
    TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE…………………………………………………………………...……………………………… 5 1 INTRODUCTION......................................................................................................................... 10 2 PROGRESS OF RELEASE 99, RELEASE 5, RELEASE 6, RELEASE 7 UMTS-HSPA .......... 12 2.1 PROGRESS TIMELINE .................................................................................................................. 12 3 PROGRESS AND PLANS FOR RELEASE 8: EVOLVED EDGE, HSPA EVOLVED/HSPA+ AND LTE/EPC ............................................................................................................................ 19 4 THE GROWING DEMANDS FOR WIRELESS DATA APPLICATIONS ................................... 26 4.1 WIRELESS DATA TRENDS AND FORECASTS ................................................................................. 28 4.2 WIRELESS DATA REVENUE ......................................................................................................... 29 4.3 3G DEVICES............................................................................................................................... 31 4.4 3G APPLICATIONS ...................................................................................................................... 34 4.5 FEMTOCELLS ............................................................................................................................. 41 4.6 SUMMARY .................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Litepoint Iqxstream™
    TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS LitePoint IQxstream™ © 2019 LitePoint, A Teradyne Company. All rights reserved. IQxstream is a manufacturing oriented, physical layer communication system tester, tailored to verifying performance in high volume production environments. Non-signaling physical layer testers offer 3x or better test throughput when compared against signaling based methodologies typical of R&D and conformance testing. IQxstream addresses all major mobile technologies and RF bands including: LTE, W-CDMA / HSPA / HSPA+, GSM / EDGE, CDMA2000 / 1xEV-DO and TD-SCDMA in support of the Smartphone, Tablet, Data-Card, Module, IoT, and Small Cell base station markets. IQxstream provides comprehensive non-signaling test coverage for LTE, LTE-Advanced, and LTE-Advanced Pro devices and modules. LTE device test coverage includes UE categories 1 through 12 as well as IoT UE categories 0 (Cat-M1) and Cat-NB1 (NB-IoT). One Instrument – Three Configurations Available in a Single DUT or 4 DUT configuration, the single Cellular Test Module IQxstream is available with 2 RF Ports or 5 RF Ports enabled. 2-Port configuration for Single DUT Useful in a lab environment or on a troubleshooting station where multi-DUT capability is not required, the single DUT version of IQxstream provides all the functionality of a multi-DUT solution at reduced cost. 5-Port configuration for 4 DUT Fully capable of testing today’s and tomorrow’s Smart Devices and Small Cells, the 4 DUT unit provides support for full TX/RX physical layer testing including the ability to test diversity receivers. In addition to diversity testing, the streaming port can be used to send other waveforms to the DUT such as GPS, GLONASS and UHF TV.
    [Show full text]
  • Vulnerabilities of LTE and LTE- Advanced Communication White Paper
    Vulnerabilities of LTE and LTE- Advanced Communication White Paper Long Term Evolution (LTE) technology has become the technology of choice for keeping up with the requirement of higher throughput in mobile communication in bands below 6 GHz. It is expected that within the next decade LTE will become the primary commercial standard. LTE is often used to broadcast emergency information in times of natural disasters and national crises and is under investigation for further end use application in government as well as military application fields. Communication via LTE has some vulnerabilities. This drawback is a matter of concern since it is possible to completely take down the LTE network or at least partially block communication, intentionally with the help of jamming signals, or unintentionally through various forms of interference. An example of unintentional interference issues is the frequently discussed co-existence issues with Air Traffic Control (ATC) S-band radar and Digital TV bands. The in-device co-existence challenge is also a potentially important issue with the rapid evolution of multi-standard radios. This White Paper will focus on the vulnerabilities of LTE communication by explaining LTE jamming and unintentional interference problems, address the co- existence issues with other services, and discuss the mitigation options to build a broad perspective on the possible deployment of the LTE technology for future military and civil governmental applications. Understanding the susceptance of new technologies to known and expected environments is critical to the adoption for defense applications 1MA245_2e White Paper - Naseef Mahmud 9.2014 Table of Contents Table of Contents 1 Abstract……….
    [Show full text]
  • UMTS Report an Investment Perspective
    UMTS Report An Investment Perspective [ RESEARCHING THE FUTURE / / INVESTING TODAY ] www.durlacher.com Durlacher UMTS Report An Investment Perspective Contents 1 Introduction 5 1.1 Highlights 5 1.2 Investment Hypothesis 7 1.3 Methodology 8 1.4 Scope 9 2 Current Mobile Market Overview 10 2.1 The UMTS Dream 10 2.2 Market Drivers 11 2.2.1 Mobility in Europe is booming 11 2.2.2 2001: Crossroads in the European Market 11 2.2.3 Will the mobile data market fly? 13 2.2.4 The mobile data crunch 13 2.3 UMTS Investment 14 2.3.1 Investment Drivers for UMTS 14 2.3.2 UMTS License Fees Will Total €120 billion in Europe 15 2.3.3 Infrastructure Costs Will Top €140 billion 16 2.3.4 Handset Subsidies Are Here to Stay 16 2.3.5 UMTS Will Accelerate Market Consolidation 17 2.4 Market Forecasts 19 2.5 Dynamics of the Mobile Data Value Web 23 2.5.1 Network Equipment 24 2.5.2 Devices 24 2.5.3 Enabling Technologies 25 2.5.4 Application Developers 26 2.5.5 Application Providers 27 2.5.6 Content Providers 27 2.5.7 Mobile network operators 28 2.5.8 Virtual Operators 29 2.5.9 Mobile Portals 29 2.6 Benchmarking Europe with Japan and the US 30 2.6.1 Europe 31 2.6.2 Japan 31 2.6.3 United States 34 3 New Mobile Business Models 35 3.1 Mobile Networks Will Open Up 35 3.2 WASP (Wireless ASP) 37 3.2.1 Drivers 37 3.2.2 Players 37 3.2.3 Revenue Models 38 3.2.4 WASPs: Success Factors 39 3.2.5 Market Outlook 39 3.3 Virtual Operators 40 3.3.1 Definition 40 3.3.2 VOs: A Varied Breed 41 3.3.3 Drivers 42 3.3.4 New VOs 43 3.3.5 Revenue Models 44 3.3.6 Key Success Factors 45 3.3.7 Implementation Strategies 45 3.4 Multi-Access Portals 46 3.4.1 Definition 46 3.4.2 Point Solutions Dominate Today ’s Market 46 3.4.3 Players 47 3.4.4 Key Success Factors 48 3.4.5 Market Entry Strategies 49 3.4.6 Revenue Models 49 COPYRIGHT, DURLACHER RESEARCH LTD., EQVITEC PARTNERS OY 1 Durlacher UMTS REPORT 4 Impact of Technology 51 Contents (continued) 4.1 Network and Coverage Evolution 52 4.1.1 2G Technologies 53 4.1.2 2.5G Network Technologies 53 4.1.3 3G Network Technologies 54 4.1.4 Bandwidth – Hype vs.
    [Show full text]
  • Globalised Telecom Revolution: a Survey of Wireless Communication Technology
    ISSN (Print) : 2319-5940 ISSN (Online) : 2278-1021 International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer and Communication Engineering Vol. 2, Issue 9, September 2013 Globalised Telecom Revolution: A Survey of Wireless Communication technology Ravendra Ratan Singh Jandail1 , Dr. Ritu Sindhu2 Student M.Tech, School of Computing Science & Engineering , Galgotias University, Greater Noida, India1 Asst. Professor, School of Computing Science & Engineering , Galgotias University, Greater Noida, India2 Abstract: Mobile communications systems revolutionized the way of people communication, joining together and mobility during conversation. The word telecommunication is formed from the words TELE (bridging large distance) and COMMUNICATION (Conversation).Telecom has attracted many users and undergoing numerous changes, from half duplex to point-to-point , short message services , conferencing , video calling , point-to-multi- point Internet connectivity to high speed data transfer from (9.6 Kbps to 100 Mbps). In this Paper we abstracting the evolution and development of various generations of mobile wireless technology along with their significance performance of one over the other and some of the important issues pertaining to the evolution of mobile communication networks from 0th generation (which was the initiation of wireless communication).The first generation has fulfilled the basic mobile voice, while the second generation has introduced capacity and coverage. 2G followed by the third generation, which has quest for data at higher speeds to open the gates for truly “mobile broadband” experience. It was further realized by the fourth generation (4G).The Fourth generation is providing access to wide range of telecommunication services, including advanced multimedia application supported by mobile and fixed networks, which are increasingly packet based, along with a support for low to high mobility applications and wide range of data rates.
    [Show full text]
  • Wireless Networks
    C HAPTER 9 Wireless Networks In the very near future, the number of wireless devices will outnumber wired devices. A few decades ago, wireless voice (walkie-talkie and other vocal variants), wireless audio (radio), wireless video (television), and wireless data (satellite, microwave, and so on) were each developed to address a particular communication purpose. Of these, wireless voice has found great acceptance through a fundamental one-on-one communication style. Flexibly switched to any other number in the world, wireless voice adds the enchantment of porta- bility and mobility to individual communications. To a large extent, personal wireless voice has become the axis of communication convergence. Wireless mobility is a must-have. Like an explorer’s compass, your mobile phone has become your navigator to personal communication. You use it to blaze new conversations ahead while you maintain association with current and past acquaintances. Wireless computing is a need-to-have on its way to a must-have reality and is leading per- sonal computing into the superpersonal realm. As your personal access card into the world’s storehouse of knowledge, it becomes your private window into a vast library of learning, of which data, audio, and video are an indispensable part of the total comprehension of knowledge. A remarkable convergence of wireless communications and wireless low-power computing is colliding into handheld form factors for pocket or purse. Wireless networks enable the capability and equality of personal communications, super- personal computing, and timesaving information to everyone who chooses to explore the communication landscape. Without them, you might never leave home or the office.
    [Show full text]
  • Next Generation Public Protection and Disaster Relief (PPDR) Communication Networks’
    Consultation Paper No. 15/2017 Telecom Regulatory Authority of India Consultation Paper on ‘Next Generation Public Protection and Disaster Relief (PPDR) communication networks’ 9th October, 2017 Mahanagar Doorsanchar Bhawan Jawahar Lal Nehru Marg New Delhi-110002 Written Comments on the Consultation Paper are invited from the stakeholders by 20th November, 2017 and counter-comments by 4th December, 2017. Comments and counter-comments will be posted on TRAI’s website www.trai.gov.in. The comments and counter-comments may be sent, preferably in electronic form, to Shri S. T. Abbas, Advisor (Networks, Spectrum and Licensing), TRAI on the email ID [email protected] with subject titled as ‘Comments / counter -comments to Consultation Paper on Next Generation Public Protection and Disaster Relief (PPDR) communication networks’ For any clarification/ information, Shri S. T. Abbas, Advisor (Networks, Spectrum and Licensing), TRAI, may be contacted at Telephone No. +91-11-23210481 i CONTENTS CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION ………………………………………………………. 1 CHAPTER II: TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS AND EXECUTION MODELS FOR BROADBAND PPDR …………………………………………………………….. 8 CHAPTER III: SPECTRUM AVAILABILITY AND FUTURE REQUIREMENTS FOR BROADBAND PPDR …………………………………….. 28 CHAPTER IV: INTERNATIONAL PRACTICES ………………………………….. 38 CHAPTER V: ISSUES FOR CONSULTATION …………………………………… 50 LIST OF ACRONYMS …………………………………………………………………. 51 ANNEXURE I ……………………………………………………………………………. 53 ANNEXURE II …..………………………………………………………………………. 58 ii CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION 1.1 India with its geo-climatic conditions, high density of population, socio- economic disparities and other geo-political reasons, has high risk of natural and man-made disasters. In respect to natural disasters, it is vulnerable to forest fires, floods, droughts, earthquakes, tsunamis and cyclones. Other than the natural disasters, the nation is also vulnerable to man-made disasters like: War, terrorist attacks, and riots; Chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear crisis; Hijacks, train accidents, airplane crashes, shipwrecks, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • 4G Americas LTE Carrier Aggregation October 2014 1
    4G Americas LTE Carrier Aggregation October 2014 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................ 4 2. Introduction [1] ........................................................................................................................................ 5 3. Global Market Trends, Milestones in Carrier Aggregation (CA) ........................................................ 5 4. 3GPP Status for Release 10, Release 11 and Release 12 CA Features ............................................. 6 4.1 3GPP CA Combinations Definition Process ........................................................................................ 6 4.2 CA Configurations ............................................................................................................................... 9 4.3 Contiguous and Non-Contiguous Intra-Band CA .............................................................................. 13 4.4 Inter-Band CA .................................................................................................................................... 17 5. CA Technology Description ................................................................................................................ 20 5.1 CA Benefits and Performance ........................................................................................................... 20 5.2 Cell Management and Cell Activation-Deactivation .........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Terminal Capabilities in the 700 Mhz Band
    Terminal capabilities in the 700 MHz band Final report for Ofcom Region 1 800MHz Allocation DTT Channel 48 APT Allocation WP5D Option 7 WP5D Option 6 WP5D Option 5 WP5D Option 4a WP5D Option 4 WP5D Option 3 WP5D Option 2 WP5D Option 1 690 740 790 840 890 Issued to: Ofcom Issue date: 09 October 2013 Version: 1.1 Real Wireless Ltd PO Box 2218 Pulborough t +44 207 117 8514 West Sussex f +44 808 280 0142 RH20 4XB e [email protected] United Kingdom www.realwireless.biz Version Control Item Description Source Real Wireless Client Ofcom Report title Terminal capabilities in the 700 MHz band Sub title Final Report for Ofcom Issue date 09 October 2013 Version Date Comment V1.0 24/09/2013 Issued to Ofcom V1.1 09/10/2013 Revised with Ofcom feedback comments Issue date: 09 October 2013 Version: 1.1 CONFIDENTIAL TO OFCOM AND REAL WIRELESS About Real Wireless Real Wireless is a leading independent wireless consultancy, based in the U.K. and working internationally for enterprises, vendors, operators and regulators – indeed any organization which is serious about getting the best from wireless to the benefit of their business. We seek to demystify wireless and help our customers get the best from it, by understanding their business needs and using our deep knowledge of wireless to create an effective wireless strategy, implementation plan and management process. We are experts in radio propagation, international spectrum regulation, wireless infrastructures, and much more besides. We have experience working at senior levels in vendors, operators, regulators and academia.
    [Show full text]
  • A Survey on Legacy and Emerging Technologies for Public Safety Communications
    1 A Survey on Legacy and Emerging Technologies for Public Safety Communications Abhaykumar Kumbhar1;2, Farshad Koohifar1, Ismail˙ Guvenc¸¨ 1, and Bruce Mueller2 1Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33174 2Motorola Solutions, Inc., Plantation, FL 33322 USA Email: fakumb004, fkooh001, [email protected], [email protected] Abstract—Effective emergency and natural disaster manage- policy have been discussed in [4] and [5], which study the ment depend on the efficient mission-critical voice and data decoupling of spectrum licenses for spectrum access, a new communication between first responders and victims. Land nationwide system built on open standards with consistent Mobile Radio System (LMRS) is a legacy narrowband technology used for critical voice communications with limited use for data architecture, and fund raising approach for the transition to a applications. Recently Long Term Evolution (LTE) emerged as new nationwide system. As explained in [6], communication of a broadband communication technology that has a potential time critical information is an important factor for emergency to transform the capabilities of public safety technologies by response. In [7] and [8], insights on cognitive radio technology providing broadband, ubiquitous, and mission-critical voice and are presented, which plays a significant role in making the best data support. For example, in the United States, FirstNet is building a nationwide coast-to-coast public safety network based use of scarce spectrum in public safety scenarios. Integration of LTE broadband technology. This paper presents a comparative of other wireless technologies into PSC is studied in [9], with survey of legacy and the LTE-based public safety networks, and a goal to provide faster and reliable communication capability discusses the LMRS-LTE convergence as well as mission-critical in a challenging environment where infrastructure is impacted push-to-talk over LTE.
    [Show full text]
  • Iqxstream-5G™ 5G Sub-6 Ghz Cellular Test System
    TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS IQxstream-5G™ 5G Sub-6 GHz Cellular Test System © 2019 LitePoint, A Teradyne Company. All rights reserved. Port Descriptions Front Panel I/O Function Type Power Switch Power On/Off Pushbutton Switch RF1A/RF1B Cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth input/output N female RF2A/RF2B Cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth input/output N female RF3A/RF3B Cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth input/output N female RF4A/RF4B Cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth input/output N female LED green – powered up, running Power Indicator LED indicator LED orange – powered up, standby LED green – remote session active LED red – Session Indicator LED indicator remote session lock LED green – no faults/errors detected Status Indicator LED orange – Software error detected LED Indicator LED red – Hardware fault detected LED green – ports RF1 A/B are in one of the following status: • OFF/IN • IN/OFF • IN/IN LED orange – ports RF1 A/B are in one RF port 1 indicator of the following status: LED indicator (A/B and C/D ports) • OUT/IN • IN/OUT LED red – ports RF1 A/B are in one of the following status: • OFF/OUT • OUT/OFF • OUT/OUT IQxstream-5G 2 LED green – ports RF2 A/B are in one of the following status: • OFF/IN • IN/OFF • IN/IN LED orange – ports RF2 A/B are in one RF port 2 indicator of the following status: LED indicator (for both A and B port) • OUT/IN • IN/OUT LED red – ports RF2 A/B are in one of the following status: • OFF/OUT • OUT/OFF • OUT/OUT LED green – ports RF3 A/B are in one of the following status: • OFF/IN • IN/OFF • IN/IN LED orange – ports RF3 A/B are in one
    [Show full text]